Telemetering circuit



Oct. 17, 1961 E. v. SCHNEIDER 3,0

TELEMETERING CIRCUIT Original Filed April 13, 1955 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 Fig.1

INVENTOR. EMMOR V. SCHNEIDER Oct. 17, 1961 E. v. SCHNEIDER 3,005,190

TELEMETERING CIRCUIT Original Filed April 15, 1955 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 I I I l L @1 a5 a I O I IN V EN TOR.

ig): 89 EMMOR V. SCHNEIDER BY 9 ham Original application Apr. 13, 1955, Ser. No. 501,030. Di-

vided and this application Aug. 13, 1956, Ser. No. 603,549

10 Claims. 7 (Cl. 340-226) The invention relates in general to electrical circuits and more particularly to a telemetering form of circuit or a remote control and indicating circuit which may employ a new type of meter or remote instrument.

The circuit in general is one for an electrical device at a first location electrically energizable from a voltage source which may be at a second location with a variable impedance at the first location and the variable impedance being varied in accordance with variable conditions of the device. The instrument or remote device may be located at the second location and includes a permeable movable member cooperating with first and second coils or other magnetic means. These two coils are connected to the variable impedance in a closed circuit mesh which may be in the form of a modified bridge circuit whereby, as the impedance is varied at the first location, variable energization is applied to the two coils at the second location to exert relatively varying opposing forces on the permeable movable member.

One form of this electrical circuit may be in a remote indicator circuitwherein the movable permeable member moves an indicator needle to indicate a position of the electrical device at the first location and hence would be a telemetering circuit.

Another object of the invention is to utilize a new form of electrical meter which incorporates a brake to hold the movable permeable member in a given position even though the two coils or magnetic means of the remote instrument are de-energized, and with this brake released upon energization of these two coils.

Another object of the invention is to provide a remote control circuit for an electrical device such as an electrical motor with a part of the conductors of the indicating circuit serving as a common conductor for the electric motor energization circuit and additionally a part of the conductors for energizing the electric motor forming a part of the common conductor to the indicating circuit, so that the total conductors are reduced to a minimum, since each of the energization and indicating circuits takes the place of another conductor in the other circuit.

Another object of the invention is to utilize in this circuit an electrical meter which will measure variations in a measurable quantity of a device, yet be insensitive to voltage variations of a voltage source supplying energization to the device having the measurable quantity so that the remote circuit or telemetering circuit may be correctly calibrated.

Another object of the invention is to provide a fric tion brake for the meter in the circuit so that the brake is removed when the circuit and meter are energized and in operation, and when the meter and circuit are deenegized the brake is actuated to hold the needle or other indicating part of the meter in the previously established position to continue to indicate the position of the remotely indicated and controlled device.

Another object of the invention is to provide a circuit incorporating a coil to establish a variable force in accordance with the variable quantity to be measured 01;- indicated and to provide an opposing force in opposition thereto, which opposing force is removed when energization to the meter is interrupted so that there is no fur- United States Patent ther tendency for movement of the meter indicator needle when the energization to the meter ceases.

Another object of the invention is to provide a circuit incorporating a meter with first and second opposing magnetomotive forces each acting on a permeable movable vane and tending to move this vane in opposite rotational directions and to provide the meter with a braking system wherein the opposing magnetomotive forces are actually combined in addition to move the vane in a third direction diiferent from either of the aforementioned opposing directions to accomplish a different purpose than that accomplished by the rotational movement.

Another object of the invention is to provide a meter which may be used as a remote indicator for the position of a movable device at a remote location with the movable device utilizing electrical energy and with a potentiometer in circuit and movable therewith so that the potentiometer in combination with two different coils of the meter form a modified bridge circuit, which may be used to establish forces to move an indicator needle.

Another object of the invention is to provide a circuit incorporating a meter having two coils establishing magnetomotive forces in opposition which establish forces in a movable permeable vane of the meter wherein the entire circuit construction is such as to give a wide angle of indi cator needle movement which is very nearly linear with the quantity to be measured throughout its entire range.

Other objects and a fuller understanding of this invention may be had by referring to the following description and claims, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawing, in which:

FIGURE 1 is a reartview of an entire meter which may be used in the electrical circuit of the invention;

FIGURE 2 is a longitudinal sectional view through the meter on the line 22 of FIGURE 1;

FIGURE 3 is a front view of the meter;

FIGURE 4 is a rear view with parts broken away to show the internal construction;

FIGURE 5 is a bottom view of a modified form of meter;

FIGURE 6 is an end view of the meter of FIGURE 5;

FIGURE 7 is the preferred circuit arrangement of the meter in a remote indicating circuit; and

FIGURE 8 is a schematic diagram of an alternative circuit arrangement.

The electrical circuit of the invention may be used as a remote control or remote indicating circuit or a combination of both, and hence may be considered as a telemetering circuit. Two possible uses of the circuit of the invention are shown schematically in FIGURES 7 and 8 and incorporate the use of a novel meter structure which is more fully shown, described, and claimed in the parent application Serial No. 501,030 of which the present application is a division. Because this meter structure or remote device or instrument has novelty in and of itself, it will first be described in connection with FIGURES 1 to 4 so that the structure and operation of the entire electrical circuit of FIGURES 7 and 8 will be more clearly understood.

The FIGURES 1 to 4 show the physical details of the construction of the meter or remote device or instrument 11 which includes generally a sheet metal frame 12, coils 13 and 14, and a movable vane 15 which cooperates with coils 13 and 14. The frame may have any shape desired and has been shown as having a generally flat body 18 for ease in mounting arrangements. Ears 19 and 20 are bent generally at right angles to the body 18 to hold one end of core portions 21 and 22. A non-permeable body 23 is mounted on the frame 12 in any suitable manner such as by the peened lugs 24. In this case, the body 23 is made of die-cast zinc for ease in manufacture and ease in holding manufacturing tolerances,

although it may be made of any desired material and made in any suitable manner. The body 23 has an annular ring portion 25 and a fiat disc portion 26. The disc portion 26 is adjacent the frame 12 and has a central shaft aperture 27 and an eccentrically disposed tongue aperture 28. A sheet metal tongue 29 is formed in a central aperture 30 in the body portion 18 and this tongue 29 is bent generally at right angles to extend through the tongue aperture 28 in the fiat disc 26.

The core portions 21 and 22 have first and second pole shoes 34 and 35 connected to the respective core portions, and these pole shoes are mounted on the face of the annular ring portion 25 which is remote from the frame 12. A non-permeable support 36 is mounted to the pole shoes 34 and 35 and may be so mounted by the same means which hold the pole shoes to the annular ring portion 25 which again may be peened lugs 37. The support 36 may also act as a cover for the vane 15. The pole shoes 34 and 35 are preferably laminated for opera tion on alternating current and subscribe approximately one hundred seventy degrees of arc on the annular ring portion 25. The core portions 21 and 22 extend at approximately ninety degrees relative to each other and generally parallel to the frame 12. The pole shoes gradually taper to narrower toe portions 38 and 39.

The vane or permeable movable member 15 has a first and a second semicircular portion 42 and 43 with the first semicircular portion being of considerably smaller radius than the second portion. Both portions are symmetrical about a shaft 44 on which the vane is fixedly attached. The shaft is journalled in the central shaft aperture 27 in the body 23 and in another shaft aperture 45 in the non-permeable support 36. It is so journalled so as to permit axial movement as well as rotational movement. A leaf spring 46 is fastene'd to the non-permeable support 36 as by the rivet 47, and the lower end of the leaf spring engages the rear end of the shaft 44 to move is axially so that the semicircular vane portion 43 frictionally engages a shoulder 48 formed in the annular ring portion 25. The shoulder 48 is approximately two hundred seventy degrees in extent between first and second stops 51 and 52 which are generally adjacent the core portions 21 and 22. Because the periphery of the second vane portion 43 is about one hundred eighty degrees of arc, these stops 51 and 52 permit approximately a ninety degree rotation of the vane 15. The tongue 29 extends to a position adjacent the first vane portion 42 so as to form a magnetic path between the vane 15 and the frame 12 through the agency of the tongue 29.

The FIGURE 2 especially shows that with the spring 46 urging the vane 15 against the shoulder 48, the vane 15 is to the right of the median plane of the laminated pole shoes 34 and 35. The shaft 44 and vane 15 has enough axial movement to permit the vane to be moved into the median plane of the pole shoes 34 and 35 against the urging of the spring 4-6. A meter needle 53 has been shown as one form of an indicator which may be attached to the shaft 44 for rotation therewith to give the meter indication.

The FIGURE 7 shows a circuit in which the meter 11 may be used. This may be a remote control or indicator circuit 60, wherein the meter 11 is at a first location or remote indicator location 61 to indicate or control a position of a movable device at a second location 62. The movable device has been shown as an electric motor 63 which in this case is a reversible two-phase induction motor having a rotor 64 and first and second phase windings 65 and 66. A potentiometer 67 is also at the second location 62 and has first and second end terminals 68 and 69 and a movable blade contact 70 connected at 71 to be'ope'rated in accordance with movement of the electric motor 63. First ends of the motor windings 65 and 66 are interconnected and connected by a common lead 72 to terminal 68, and the other ends 'of the windings are connected to terminals 73 and 74. The movable blade 4 contact 70 is connected to a terminal 75 and the potentiometer end terminal 69 is connected to a terminal 76. All of these parts with reference numerals from 63 to 76 may be located at the second location 62,

One use for such a meter 11 is in a remote unit to control or indicate the position of an antenna, such as a television receiving antenna, which is rotated by an antenna rotator device 77 utilizing the motor 63 as a power source. The potentiometer 67 is connected in the antenna rotator device so that the movable blade contact 70 moves in accordance with the antenna rotation for a three hundred sixty degree rotation of the antenna. To permit this three hundred sixty degree rotation of the movable blade contact 70, the potentiometer 67 may be in the form of a slight spiral with overlapping ends as shown in this FIGURE 7.

The first location 61 may be a control station as well as a remote indicator station for control of the reversible motor 63 and to indicate the position of the motor and/ or the antenna rotated thereby. This is one illustration of the use of this meter 11 and in such case the remote indicator position may have first, second, third, and fourth terminals 81, 82, 83, and 84 which are adapted to be connected to the terminals 73, 74, 75, and 76 by conductors 85, 86, 87, and 88 respectively. At the remote indicator position 61, a supply transformer 89 is provided which has a primary winding 90 adapted to be energized from an alternating current source 91. The transformer 89 also has a secondary 92 which may be a low voltage winding for safety, and this secondary winding 92 is shown as provided with first and second end terminals 93 and 94 and an intermediate terminal 95. A calibrating potentiometer 98 is connected between the terminals 93 and 84, and a balancing potentiometer 99 is connected between the terminals 93 and 95. A single-pole double-throw reversing switch 101 has a switch blade 102 and first and second contacts 103 and 104 engageable by the switch blade 102. A condenser 105 to provide out-of-phase voltages to the phase windings 65 and 66 is connected across the contacts 103 and 104 which are connected to the terminals 81 and 82, respectively.

The meter 11 is shown in an elementary nature in FIGURE 7 and shows coils 13 and 14 connected in series by a conductor 108. The other end of the coil 14 is connected by a conductor 109 to the terminal 93, and the other end of the coil 13 is connected by a conductor 110 to the slider 111 on the balancing potentiometer 99. The vane 15 and meter needle 53 have been elementarily shown in FIGURE 7.

Operation The operation of the meter of FIGURES 1 to 4 may best be understood by an explanation of the operation of the circuit 60 of FIGURE 7. The meter 11 is designed to work in a form of a bridge circuit which is best explained if one initially assumes that a conductor represented by the dotted line 114 is present in the circuit interconnecting the terminal 68 of the potentiometer 67 and the terminal 115 which is an end terminal of the meter coil 13. If this conductor 114 were present, it would be noted that the two halves of the potentiometer 67 on either side of the movable blade contact 70 in conjunction with the ineter coils 13 and 14 from a bridge circuit energized by the balancing potentiometer 99. With the movable blade contact 70 in the position shown; namely, in the mid-point of the potentiometer 67 and neglecting the resistance of the conductors and the calibrating potentiometer 98, there would be equal energization on the coils 13 and 14. Referring now to FIG- URES l to 4, this energization of the coils 13 and 14 establishes the pole shoes 34 and 35 of opposite polarity, because of the way the coils are wound or connected.

The magnetic flux established by each er the coils 13 and 14 follows separate paths. The fiux from coil 13 travels through a path comprising the core 21, pole shoe 34, air gap 116, vane 15, air gap 118, tongue 29, frame 12, and car 19 to return to the core 21. At the same instant, flux from the coil 14 travels through a path comprising the core 22, car 20, frame 12, tongue 29, air gap 118, vane 15, air gap 117, and pole shoe 35 to return to the core 22. The tongue 29 thus establishes a leakage flux path along the magnetic neutral axis of the meter frame 12 and vane 15. The flux lines bridging the air gap 116 tend to rotate the vane 15 clockwise, because these flux lines attempt to separate to establish the lowest magnetic impedance or reluctance in the magnetic circuit of coil 13. At the same time the flux lines bridging the air gap 117'tend to rotate the vane 15 counterclockwise to establish the minimum reluctance in the magnetic circuit of coil 14. For the aforementioned condition of equal energization of coils 13 and 14, the forces on vane 15 will be equal and balanced, and the vane will be stationary in the position shown in FIGURE 4; namely, where generally equal areas of the vane portion 43 lie opposite the pole shoes 34 and 35. Also in this condition of equal energization of coils 34 and 35, it will be noted that the flux from the coils 34 and 35 will be equal and in opposite directions in the tongue 29, so that the resultant flux therein is zero. Because of this zero or minimum resultant flux in the tongue 29 under this equal energization condition, it will be observed that the flux in the circuit travels substantially across the air gap 116, through the vane 15 and across the air gap 117, and thus the vane 15 links the flux of the coil 13 with that of. the coil 14.

When there is unequal energization on coils 13 and 14, with the coil 13 having greater energization, for example, there is a greater flux across air gap 116 than across air gap 117, because the tongue 29 shunts a portion of the flux back to the coil 13 without this flux traversing the core 22 of the coil 14. This greater flux at air gap 116 rotates the vane 15 clockwise to a new angular position where the opposing torques on the vane 15 are equal. Therefore, it will be seen that either equal or unequal energization on the coils 13 and 14 establish magnetomotive forces in opposition and consequently estahlish forces in opposition in the vane 15, with these forces being in opposite rotational directions. However, the two fluxes at the air gaps 116 and 117 establish additive forces in an axial direction which tend to pull the vane 15 into the median plane of the pole shoes 34 and 35 despite the urging of the spring 46. The energization of either of the coils 13 and 14 under the conditions shown is sufiicient to establish an axial force great enough tomove the vane 15 away from the arcuate shoulder 48 and thus release the frictional braking engagement previously established between the vane 15 and the body 23. With the releasing of this frictional braking engagement the vane 15 is free to rotate in accordance with the relative energization of the coils 13 and 14. Upon deenergization of the coils 13 and 14, the leaf spring 46 moves the shaft 44 axially so that the vane 15 reengages the shoulder 48 to establish the frictional braking engagement. This holds the meter needle 53 in its formerly established rotational position and thus the meter 11 continues to indicate the previously established indicator'position even after energization of the meter has ceased.

Returning again to the circuit of FIGURE 7, assum ing the conductor 114 to be in the circuit and negligible resistance in all conductors, the bridge circuit of the potentiometer 67 and coils 13 and 14 is such that if the potentiometer blade 70 is moved clockwise to the right limit position there will then be maximum energization on the coil 13 and a zero or minimum energization on the coil 14. As seen in FIGURE 4, the meter needle 53 will be. moved to its right limit position with the vane portion 43 abutting the stop 51. Conversely, if the potentiometer blade 70 is moved counterclockwise to its lim tposition, the meter coil 13 will be shorted out and full energization applied to the meter coil 14 to move the meter needle 53 to its left limit position with the vane portion 43 abutting the stop 52.

The antenna rotator device 77 is desired to be rotationally reversible, which reequires at least three conductors to the motor, namely, conductors 85, 86, and 88, with the motor energized from the transformer secondary 92 and selectablein rotational direction by the switch contact 102. This selects a particular one of the phase windings 65 and 66 for direct energization, and energization of the other phase winding through the condenser 105 for leading current- Therefore, this causes the selected rotation. The bridge circuit previously described, which had as part thereof the conductor 114, also required three conductors, namely, 114, 87, and 88. When the bridge circuit and the motor energization circuit are combined as shown in FIGURE 7, conductor 88 may serve double duty as a common conductor so that only five conductors are needed. Antenna rotator devices presently on the market, however, are available with only four conductors interconnecting the antenna rotator location and the remote indicator location. There fore, it is highly desirable to utilize a circuit having only four conductors for interconnecting the two locations yet which provide both the control and indicator functions. The circuit 60 of FIGURE 7 provides this double function of both control and indication with only four conductors 85, 86, 87, and 88, since by use of the par ticular construction of the meter 11 plus other circuit elements, the conductor 114 is not required.

Another way of looking at this is that the conductor 114, if present, would be a part of the energization circuit to the motor 63, in combination with conductors and 86. Also, conductor 114 would be a part of the bridge circuit or indicator circuit, in combination with conductors 87 and 88. Since the motor energization circuit and the indicator circuit are used together, conductor 114 may be eliminated. This is because the remaining conductors 87 and 88 of the indicator circuit take the place of conductor 114 as 'far as the motor energization circuit is concerned, and because the remaining conductors 85 and 86 of the motor energization circuit take the place of conductor 114 as far as the indicator circuit is concerned. The motor energization circuit including the motor 63 and the left portion of secondary 92 thus become conductive or correlative means to correlate the potentials of the terminals 68 and 115.

The conductors 85-88 may be of any length and the length is not determinable at the time of manufacture of the antenna rotator device or at the time of the manufacture of the meter 11 because the length of these conductors will depend upon each particular installation of the customer. Typically, these conductors may be from twenty-five to one hundred twenty-five feet long using No. 18 wire and a motor current which may, for ex ample, be 1.3 amperes, and a secondary voltage of thirtythree volts. The voltage drop in each of the conductors 85, 86, and 88 may be from a .2 to 1.2 volts. Therefore, it will be seen that with a one volt drop in conductor 88, for example, if the potentiometer blade 70 were moved to the clockwise limit, there still would be one volt applied to the coil 14 rather than zero volts as in the ideal bridge circuit previously described. The calibrating'poten'fiometer 98 has therefore been inserted in this conductor 88 so that upon installation the total resistance of conductor 88 and potentiometer 98 may be adjusted to a predetermined maximum, equivalent, for example, to a one hundred twenty-five or one hundred fifty foot long conductor. The indicator needle 53 may be calibrated to read North, South, East, West, and North, for example, as shown in FIGURE 3, with the indicator needle indicating the south direction in FIGURES 1 and 4 and 7 and designed to indicate the north position with either end rotational limit. The circuit 60 of FIGURE 7 shows that the motor 63 and potentiometer 67 are energized in series across the secondary winding 92 with the voltage at the intermediate terminal 95 supposedly equal to the voltage of the potentiometer terminal 68, using the secondary end terminal 93 as a reference. Because the variations in conductor length are unknown at the time of manufacture and because manufacturing differences between difierent condensers 105 have been found in practice to effect a considerable diiference in motor current, the balancing potentiometer 99 has been provided so that movement of the slider 1 11 can be made to establish terminal 68 at the same potential as the terminal 115 and therefore in effect simulate, as far as the meter 11 is concerned, the explanatory bridge condition wherein conductor 114 was utilized.

In practice, the meter 11 has been found to be quite linear because of the tapered pole shoes 34 and 35, because of the flux traversing the core portions 21 and 22 in series, and because of the calibrating and balancing potentiometers 98 and 99. Also, when the switch blade is moved to the central oif position to de-energize the entire circuit, then both coils 13 and 14 are de-cnergized and the meter needle 53 is retained in its former indicating position because of the friction brake 15-48. This meter therefore has definite advantages over the prior type of meters because in such prior art meters, the force proportional to the quantity to be measured is generally resister by a spring; and therefore, when the electrical quantity to be measured was removed from the meter, then such spring restored the meter needle to a zero or initial position. The present meter retains the formerly established meter indication and therefore it is not necessary to move the switch contact N2 in either direction to temporarily start the motor 63 merely to determine the present position of the antenna rotator device 77.

When the coil 13, for example, is supplied with maximum energization and the coil 14 with minimum energization, then the flux from coil 13 traverses the core portion 21, the pole shoe 34, the vane15, and jumps an air gap 118 to the tongue 29 to return to the core portion 21 through the frame 12. This is a shut path for the flux, and it will be noted that this shunt path is also followed in the opposite direction by the flux from the coil 14 when this coil 14 has greater energization than coil 13. At the neutral or balance position shown, the shunting flux is generally equal and opposite in the tongue 29 to thereby have substantially zero resultant flux, except for leakage.

The FIGURES and 6 show an alternative construction of a meter 125 similar in many respects to the meter 11. The meter 125 has the coils 13 and 14 mounted on a permeable frame126 which has an upstanding premeable tongue 127 for cooperation with a small semicircular vane portion 128 of a permeable vane 129. This vane also has a large radius vane portion 130 which cooperates with arcuate pole shoes 131 and 132 connected to the cores 133 and 134 for the coils 13 and 14. The pole shoes 131 and 132 are not as long in peripheral extent as in the structure of FIGURES l4, and it will be noted that the tongue 127 is disposed not between the cores 133 and 134 but on the side opposite, so that it is between the similarly tapered ends of the pole shoes 131 and 132.

The FIGURE 6 shows that the vane 129 is disposed below the median plane of the pole shoes 131 and 13.2 under the influence of gravity and is attached to a shaft 135 which permits rotation and axial movement of the vane 129. A disc 136 is carried fixedly with the shaft 135 and vane 129, as is the base 137 of indicator needle 138. A non-permeable support 139 on the frame 126 provides a journal for the shaft 135 at a second disc 140. Upon energization of the coils 13 and 14, the magnetic flux thereof pulls the vane 129 toward the median plane of the pole shoes 131 and 132 to release a friction brake previously applied by engagement of the needle 8 base 137 with the disc 140 carried by the support 139. Thus, this meter 125 may be actuated and will operate essentially in the same manner as the meter 11.

The FIGURE 8 shows an alternative circuit arrange ment 141 wherein the meter 11 again indicates the position of the antenna rotator device 77 utilizing the potentiometer 67. In this circuit 141 of FIGURE 8, a cali brating rheostat 142 is connected between the conductor 87 and the junction 108 of the meter coils 13 and 14. Also, a balancing rheostat 143 is connected in series between the coil terminal and the secondary inter-' mediate terminal 95. 8, the calibrating rheostat 142 may be adjusted to compensate for the difierent lengths of conductors 85, 86, 87, and 88 and for the different amounts of current through the motor 63, and the balancing rheostat 143 may be adjusted to establish the potential of the coil terminal 115 at a potential corresponding to the potential of the potentiometer terminal 68, using terminal 93 as a reference. Thus, the meter 11 of circuit 141 may be calibrated and adjusted to correctly read the position of the antnna rotator device 77.

Either of the meters 11 or may be used in either of the circuits 60 and 141, and the antenna rotator device 77 is merely illustrative of one form of load which can be controlled from a remote location yet the position or other condition of the load can be determined or indicated at the remote location, the entire circuit using a minimum of interconnecting conductors for both control and indication, and the remote indicating meter maintaining the indicator position even when the meter and entire circuit is de-energized.

Although this invention has been described in its pre ferred form with a certain degree of particularity, it is understood that the present disclosure of the preferredform has been made only by way of example and that numerous changes in the details of construction and the combination and arrangement of parts may be resorted to without departing from the spirit and the scope of the invention as hereinafter claimed.

What is claimed is:

1. A remote indicator circuit for indicating the posi tion of an electrically operated movable device at a first location electrically energizable from an alternating current source at a second location, said source having first and second terminals and an intermediate voltage terminal, said circuit including a potentiometer at said first location and having first and second end connections and a movable blade contact adapted to be operated by said movable device upon electrical energization of said device, a remote indicating meter at said second location including a permeable vane cooperating with first and second coils, means for connecting said two meter coils' in series for energization from said alternating current source first and intermediate voltage terminals, means for connecting said source first terminal to said potentiometer first end connection, means for connecting the junction point of said meter coils to said movable blade contact, means for connecting said electrical operated movable device between said source second terminal and said potentiometer second end connection, conductive means connected in said circuit and including said electrically operated movable device and at least part of said source to correlate the potentials of said potentiometer second end connection and said intermediate voltage terminal, said two meter coils and said potentiometer with said movable blade contact establishing a modified bridge incombination with said conductive means and with the connection through said movable device and alternatingcurrent source, whereby as the potentiometer movable blade contact is moved in a first direction from a median neutral position said first meter coil obtains increasedenergization relative to said second meter coil, and whereby as said potentiometer movable blade contact is 1 moved in the opposite direction from the median neutral In this circuit 141 of FIGURE position said second meter coil receives increased energization relative to the first meter coil to move said permeable vane. p

2. A remote indicating circuit for an electrically operated movable device at a first location electrically energizable from an alternating current source at a second location, said circuit including a potentiometer at said firstlocation having first and second end connections and a movable blade contact and adapted to be operated by said movable device upon electrical energization of said device, a remote indicating meter at said second location including a permeable vane cooperating'with first and second coils, means for connecting said two meter coils in series for energization from said alternating current source, means for interconnecting the junction point of said meter coils and said movable blade contact, means for connecting said electrically-operated movable device and said potentiometer end connections in series and to said alternating current source, said two meter coils and said potentiometer with said movable blade contact establishing a modified bridge in combination with the connection through said movable device and said alternating current source, whereby as the potentiometer movable blade contact is moved in a first direction from a median neutral position said first meter coil obtains increased energization relative to said second meter coil, and whereby as said potentiometer movable blade contact is moved in the opposite direction from the median neutral position said second meter coil receives increased energization relative to the first meter coil to move said permeable vane.

3. In an electrically motor driven device, a reversible motor having first and second field windings, an end of each interconnected and connected to a common lead, a potentiometer having first and second end connections and a movable blade contact, means for moving said movable blade contact in accordance with said motor driven device, the provision of a remote indicator circuit, comprising, means for connecting the remote ends of said motor field windings to first and second conductors, respectively, means for connecting said potentiometer movable blade contact to a third conductor, means for connecting the end connections of said potentiometer between said common lead and a fourth conductor, a transformer having primary and secondary windings with said primary winding'energizable from an alternating current source, said secondary winding having first and second end terminals and an intermediate tap, a meter including a permeable vane cooperating with first and second angularly disposed coils, means for connecting said two meter coils in series between said secondary first terminal and said intermediate tap, means for connecting said secondary first end terminal to said fourth conductor, means for connecting the junction point of said meter coils to said third conductor, a single-pole, double-throw switch having first and second contacts and a movable switch contact, means for connecting said movable switch contact to said secondary second end terminal, means for connecting the first and second switch contacts to said first and second conductors, respectively, means for connecting a condenser between said first and said second conductors, conductive means connected in said circuit and including said motor and at least part of said secondary to correlate the potentials of said common lead and said intermediate tap, said two meter coils and the two portions of said potentiometer on opposite sides of said movable blade contact in a median neutral position establishing a modified bridge in combination with said conductive means and with the connection through said motor windings, whereby as the potentiometer movable blade contact is moved in a first direction from said median neutral position said first meter coil obtains increased energization relative to said second meter coil, and whereby as said potentiometer movable blade contact is moved in the opposite direction from the median nating current source ata second location, said source;

neutral position said second meter coil receives increased energization relative to the first meter coil.

4. In an electrically motor driven device a reversible motor having first and second field windings, an end of each interconnected and connected to a common lead, a potentiometer having first and second end connections and a movable blade contact, means for moving said movable blade contact in accordance with rotation of said motor, means for connecting the remote ends of said motor field windings to first and second conductors, respectively, means for connecting said potentiometer movable blade contact to a third conductor, means for-connecting the end connections of said potentiometer between said common lead and a fourth conductor, the provision of a remote indicating circuit including a transformer having primary and secondary windings with said primary winding energizable from an alternating current source, said secondary winding having first and second end terminals and an intermediate tap, a meter including a permeable vane cooperating with first and second angularly disposed coils, means for connecting said two meter coils in series between said secondary first terminal and said intermediate tap, a calibrating rheostat connected between said secondary first end terminal and said fourth conductor, a conductor interconnecting the junction point of said meter coils and said third conductor, a single-pole, double-throw switch having first and second contacts and a movable switch contact, means for connecting said movable switch contact to said secondary second end terminal, means for connecting the first and second switch contacts to said first and second conductors, respectively, means for connecting a condenser between said first and said second conductors, said two meter coils and the two portions of said potentiometer on opposite sides of said movable blade contact establishing a modified bridge in combination with the connection through said motor windings and said calibrating rheostat, whereby as the potentiometer movable blade contact is moved in a first direction from a median neutral position said first meter coil obtains increased energization relative to said second meter coil, and whereby as said potentiometer'movable blade contact is moved in the opposite direction from the median neutral position said second meter coil receives increased energization relative to the first meter coil, and said calibrating rheostat being adjustable to compensate for the length of said first through fourth conductors.

5. A remote control and indicating circuit for an electrically operated, movable device at a first location electrically energizable from an alternating current source at a second location, said circuit including a potentiometer at said first location having first and second end connections and a movable blade contact and adapted to be operated by said movable device, a remote device at said.

said alternating current source, said two coils and said potentiometer with said movable blade contact establishing a modified bridge in combination with the connection through said movable device and said alternating current source, whereby as the potentiometer movable blade contact is moved in a first direction from a median neutral position said first coil obtains increased energization relative to said second coil, and wherebyas said potentiometer movable blade contact is moved in the opposite direction from the median neutral position said second coil receives increased energization relative to the first coil to move said permeable vane.

6. A circuit for a movable device at an electrically operated first location electrically energizable from an alterhaving first and second terminals and an intermediate voltage terminal, said circuit including a variable impedance at said first location and having first and second end connections and a movable contact of variable impedance adapted to be operated by said movable device, an instrument at said second location including a perme able movable member cooperating with first and second winding means, means for connecting said two winding means in series for energization from said alternating current source first and intermediate voltage terminals, means for connecting said source first terminal to said impedance first end connection, means for connecting the junction point of said winding means to said movable contact, means for connecting said electrically operated movable device between said source second terminal and said impedance second end connection, said two winding means and said impedance with said movable contact establishing a closed circuit mesh in combination with the connection through said movable device and alternating current source, whereby as the impedance movable contact is moved in a first direction said first winding means obtains increased energization relative to said second winding means, and whereby as said impedance movable contact is moved in the opposite direction said second winding means receives increased energization relative to the first winding means to exert a variable force on said permeable vane.

7. A remote control and indicator circuit for controlling and indicating the position of an electric motor oper'ated movable device at a first location electrically energiza'ble from an alternating current source at a second location, said source having first and second terminals and an intermediate voltage terminal, said circuit including a potentiometer at said first location and having first and second end connections and a movable blade contact adapted to be operated by said movable device, a remote device at said second location including a permeable vane cooperating with first and second coils, means for-connecting said two coils in series for energization from said alternating current source first and intermediate voltage terminals, means for connecting said source fi'r'st terminal to said potentiometer first end connection, means for connecting the junction point of said coils to said movable blade contact, means for electrically connecting said motor operated movable device between said source second terminal and said potentiometer second end connection, correlative means connected in said circuit and including said movable device and at least part of said source to correlate the potentials of said potentiometer second end connection and said intermediate voltage terminal, said two coils and said potentiometer with said movable blade contact establishing a modified bridge in combination with said correlative means and with the connection through said movable device and alternating current source, whereby as the potentiometer movable blade contact is moved in a first direction from a median neutral position said first coil obtains increased energization relative to said second coil, and whereby as said potentiometer movable blade contact is moved in the opposite direction from the median neutral position said second coil receives increased energization relative to the first coil to exert a variable force on said permeable vane.

8. Inan electrically motor driven device, a reversible motor having first and second field windings, an end of each interconnected and connected to a common lead, a potentiometer having first and second end connections and amovable blade contact, means for moving said movable blade contact in accordance with said motor driven device, means for connecting the remote ends of said motor field windings to first and second conductors, respectively, means for connecting said potentiometer movable blade contact to a third conductor, means for connecting the end connections of said potentiometer between said common lead and a fourth conductor, the provision of a remote control and indicator circuit in eluding a transformer having primary and secondary windings with said primary winding energizable from an alternating current source, said secondary winding having first and second end terminals and an intermediate tap, a permeable vane cooperating with first and second coils having angularly disposed fields, means for connecting said two coils in series between said secondary first terminal and said intermediate tap, means for connecting said secondary first end terminal to said fourth conductor, means for connecting the junction point of said coils to said third conductor, double-throw switch means having first and second contact means and movable switch contact means, means for selectively connecting said secondary second end terminal to said first conductor through said first contact means and said movable switch contact means, means for selectively connecting said secondary second end terminal to said second conductor through said second contact means and said movable switch contact means, means for connecting a condenser between said first and said second conductors, said two coils and the two portions of said potentiometer on opposite sides of said movable blade contact in a median neutral position establishing a modified bridge in combination with the connection through said motor windings, whereby as the potentiometer movable blade contact is moved in a first direction from said median neutral position said first coil obtains increased energization relative to said second coil, and whereby as said potentiometer movable blade contact is moved in the opposite direction from the median neutral position said second coil receives increased energization relative to the first coil.

9. In an electrically motor driven device with a maximum of first, second, third and fourth conductors interconnecting a remote unit and the device, a reversible motor having first and second field windings, an end of each interconnected and connected to a common lead, a potentiometer having first and second end connections and a movable blade contact, means for moving said movable blade contact in accordance with rotation of said motor, means for connecting the remote ends of said motor field windings to said first and second conductors, respectively, means for connecting said potentiometer movable blade contact to said third conductor, means for connecting the end connections of said potentiometer between said common lead and said fourth conductor, the provision of a remote control and indicating circuit at said remote unit, including a transformer having primary and secondary windings with said primary winding energizable from an alternating current source, said secondary winding having first and second end terminals and an intermediate tap, a permeable vane rotatively cooperating with first and second angularly disposed coils, means for connecting said two coils in series between said secondary first terminal and said intermediate tap, a rheostat connected between said secondary first end terminal and said fourth conductor, a conductor interconnecting the junction point of said coils and said third conductor, switch means for selectively connecting said secondary second end terminal to said first and to said second conductors, means for connecting a condenser between said first and said second conductors, said two coils and the two portions of said potentiometer on opposite sides of said movable blade contact establishing a modified bridge in combination with the connection through said motor field windings and said rheostat, whereby as tne potentiometer movable blade contact is moved in a first direction from a median neutral position said first coil obtains increased energization relative to said second coil, and whereby as said potentiometer movable blade contact is moved in the opposite direction from the median neutral position said second coil receives increased energization relative to the first coil, said rheostat being adjustable to compensate for the length of said first through fourth conductors, a friction brake for said permeable vane, spring means to axially urge said vane for engagement of said friction brake, the energization of said coils establishing a magnetic force on said vane to overcome said spring means for disengagement of said friction brake to permit rotative movement of said vane, the de-energization of said coils permitting engagement of said friction brake to hold said vane in a given position for continued indication of the position of said device despite such de-energization.

10. In an electrically motor driven device a reversible motor having first and second field windings, an end of each interconnected and connected to a common lead, a potentiometer having first and second end connections and a movable blade contact, means for moving said movable blade contact in accordance with rotation of said motor, means for connecting the remote ends of said motor field windings to first and second conductors, respectively, means for connecting said potentiometer movable blade contact to a third conductor, means for connecting the end connections of said potentiometer between said common lead and a fourth conductor, the provision of a remote indicating meter including a transformer having primary and secondary windings with said primary winding energizable from an alternating current source, said secondary winding having first and second end terminals and an intermediate tap, a meter including a permeable vane cooperating with first and second angularly disposed coils, means for connecting said two meter coils in series between said secondary first terminal and said intermediate tap, a conductor interconnecting said secondary first end terminal and said fourth conductor, a calibrating rheostat connected between the junction point of said meter coils and said third conductor, a single-pole, double-throw switch having first and second contacts and a movable switch contact, means for connecting said movable switch contact to said secondary second end terminal, means for connecting the first and second switch contacts to said first and second conductors, respectively, means for connecting a condenser between said first and said second conductors, said two meter coils and the two portions of said potentiometer on opposite sides of said movable blade contact establishing a modified bridge in combination with the connection through said motor windings and said calibrating rheostat, whereby as the potentiometer movable blade contact is moved in a first direction from a median neutral position said first meter coil obtains increased energization relative to said second meter coil, and whereby as said potentiometer movable blade contact is moved in the opposite direction from the median neutral position said second meter coil receives increased energization relative to the first meter coil, and said calibrating rheostat being adjustable to compensate for the length of said first through fourth conductors.

References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 1,822,683 Wilde Sept. 8, 1931 2,354,902 Wolferz Aug. 1, 1944 2,368,701 Borden Feb. 6, 1945 2,433,970 Yardeny Jan. 6, 1948 2,736,854 Will Feb. 28, 1956 2,815,501 Benson Dec. 3, 1957 OTHER REFERENCES Publication, Telemetering, by Borden and Thynell (pp. 5356 required) (copyright 1948). (Copy in Div. 42, TK 399B6.) 

